âTheir dietary preferences are a little bit mind-blowing,â says Susannah McCarthy, props master for HBOâs Mare of Easttown, of its inhabitants. The miniseries, which aired its finale on Sunday, has enraptured audiences for seven weeks â yes, in part due to the mysterious murder at its core. But as much thanks to its highly Pennsylvanian milieu, and the fact that our highly Pennsylvanian hero, Mare â whose Oâs stretch longer than the Delaware Water Gap â is played by arguably the most British living person, Kate Winslet. But the Oscar-winning actress is not afraid of a challenge (this is a woman whoâs willingly worked with James Cameron twice, after all), and her commitment to inhabiting Mare on both the inside and out has been remarkable to watch. Never more so, however, than when it comes to her on-camera eating.
Not since Tony Soprano has eat-acting been so enmeshed with a performance, and Winslet couldnât have done it without McCarthy, a local to the Philadelphia suburb where the show was shot, who made each hoagie, cheesesteak, and Rolling Rock a reality. Every edible moment, McCarthy explains, was scripted by showrunner Brad Ingelsby, also native of the area. And she insists the canât-be-faked authenticity is largely to credit for the showâs ecstatic reception. âMy daughter went into the doctorâs office this morning and all the nurses were talking about it,â she says. âThe biggest compliment to me is that here, where we worked on it, people love it.â
Just ahead of the series finale, McCarthy hopped on the phone with Vulture to break down the frequently cheese-smothered details behind some of Mare and Mareâs most memorable edible moments.
Episode 1, the breakfast sandwich
The audienceâs first introduction to Mareâs outstanding eating habits comes early on in âMiss Lady Hawk Herselfâ: driving her massive truck with one hand, an aluminum-wrapped, oozing breakfast sandwich in the other. Even as she gets a call from her ex-husband (who unbeknownst to Mare is trying to inform her of his new engagement), she does not stop tearing off egg-y mouthfuls. This was also the showâs first installment in the viral screenshot-to-Twitter pipeline. The sandwich is from a local spot called Tom Jones Restaurant, and âI think it was hilarious that it caused such a storm,â McCarthy says. âI think one of the U.K. newspapers said she was eating a hot dog and someone else said it was a pretzel with mustard. It was all very scandalous and amazing.â
The prop â and Mareâs handling of it â was in the script, McCarthy adds, and was meant to be an initial tell as to who this woman is, and how she goes about her life. âThatâs what Brad wanted for her,â she says, âis to have a sloppy sandwich and [be] drinking Wawa coffee, just, on the way.â Mare is ultimately forced to drop the sandwich to literally arrest someone, which is likely the only thing that could have come between the two.
Spray cheese on cheeseballsÂ
Shortly after, we get our first glimpse of Mareâs home life: her house, her family â and so, so many Delco kitchen staples. âThe request from the creatives was to fill the house with junk food,â McCarthy says. âMyself and almost all of my crew are local to this region so we just bought all the junk food local to the region: Herrâs potato chips â Herrâs is a local company â and Cheez Whiz and cheeseballs and pub mix and circus peanuts, liters of soda.â
When Mare walks in (though itâs more of a hobble, as sheâs injured her ankle during the arrest), sheâs greeted by her nosy mother, Helen (played by Jean Smart), and her cousin the priest, Father Dan Hastings (Neil Huff), drinking cocktails at the kitchen table. âIn that scene, the cast made Mareâs kitchen their kitchen,â says McCarthy. And when Mare takes a can of sprayable cheese and squirts it onto a cheeseball, you better believe, âThat was all Mare, putting that Cheez Whiz on that cheeseball. I mean, thatâs brilliant. I think one of the shoppers bought the Cheez Whiz and it was just on that day,â she adds. As to whether Winslet needed any tips on how to fire off the can of bright-orange paste, McCarthy insists: âNo! She is perfect. She owns her props with full confidence. That was all her.â
Episode 2: Cheesesteaks from CocoâsÂ
Cocoâs is the spot for cheesesteaks, McCarthy explains, while La Spadaâs is where you go for hoagies (more on the latter shortly). Both businesses are in Aston. âSo much of why the show has so many layers and feels so real and familiar and full of detail is because Brad is from the region,â she says. So with that said, when a character says a given sandwich is from a given purveyor, you can be certain the prop is from there, too. âYes, I sent people to those places. We worked with those places and bought cheesesteaks from there and bought hoagies from there,â McCarthy says. âI never ate one â Iâm just feeling a pang of regret. I need to go back and have one myself.â
Duck-liver hors dâoeuvre (and the couch cushions that followed)
In sharp contrast to Mare wolfing down cheesesteak in her own kitchen, later that same episode, she begrudgingly accepts an invitation to her recent sex partner Richardâs book party. (This is also the first time we see Mare attempt whatever her version of âglamourâ would be and â surprise! â she looks a lot like the beautiful actress Kate Winslet.) Sheâs clearly uncomfortable at the party, as she sits alone off to the side. When a waiter comes by and extends a duck-liver hors dâoeuvres, she accepts, placing the amuse-bouche into her mouth. It is, letâs say, incompatible with her palate, so she spits it out before slyly (?) sliding the chewed up appetizer into a couch cushion.
âWell first of all, was that amazing?â McCarthy says. âIt was a beautiful hors dâoeuvre, all custom-made. We made everything beautiful so it would be luxurious and high-end for this beautiful party â and then she spits it into a napkin and shoves it in a couch? It was so Mare. The props in the hands of an amazing actress, they will give you a different layer of who she is.â
McCarthy had been on-hand for the sceneâs rehearsal but left before shooting, so she only saw the moment for the first time when the episode aired. âI roared. I laughed so hard and my heart was so happy,â she adds. And though it was played for laughs, it was also a telling glimpse into what kind of life Mare lives. â[It showed] how she was uncomfortable in that setting,â says McCarthy. âShe didnât want to be there, she didnât want to be out on this date. And that just shows how often she doesnât get out, because you shouldnât shove food in a couch! But maybe she didnât know that.â
The gas-station sandwich, dressed in shards of glass
At the end of the episode, having fled that stuffy, duck liverâpeddling party, Mare, starving, stops at a gas station and picks up a more suitable dinner: a hefty hoagie. But as sheâs checking out, she is also being stalked by the father of Brianna Delrasso (Mackenzie Lansing), whom Mare arrested earlier in the episode for having assaulted Erin on-camera. Mare makes it home, plops down on the couch, and prepares to, finally, eat a damn sandwich in peace. And then a jug of milk flies through her window, courtesy of Mr. Delrasso, sending shards of glass flying; through the room, into Mareâs hair and, most distressingly, onto the sandwich.
âObviously it wasnât literal glass. It was candy glass we made so that it could be crushed into the sandwich, and if she missed any, she could eat it safely,â McCarthy says. Because, to be clear, this does not stop Mare from enjoying her meal. âSheâs just looking for five minutes of peace and sheâs not gonna let him mess with her dinner,â McCarthy continues. âShe shakes off the glass, pulls it out of her hair, and sheâs gonna eat it anyway. Because sheâs Mare. And the custody papers are obviously on that table, too, so thereâs other things going on. That was a very fun scene that was, again, the props telling a lot about Mare and a different layer of her story with food.â
Episode 4: Helenâs hidden ice cream
Given that sheâs Mare, ya know, of Easttown, much of the showâs edible focus is on our titular sad detective. But storytelling through food extends to other Easttown inhabitants, too; specifically, Mareâs mother Helen, who begrudgingly moved in with her daughter after Mareâs ex-husband moved out. Suffice to say, it isnât exactly how Helen predicted sheâd live out her golden years. But when we see her withdraw an unappealing bag of vegetables from the freezer, only to reveal itself as a cover-up for a pint of ice cream, we realize just how little she has for herself.
âAgain, itâs food telling the story that so little in Helenâs life is for Helen,â McCarthy says. âI can relate, when you just want to have some chocolate and you donât want to have to share it with anyone.â McCarthy also points out that Helen stores her chocolate sauce under the kitchen sink, alongside the cleaning supplies. And even as sheâs about to enjoy her ice cream, sheâs interrupted by someone at the damn door. âShe couldnât even eat it!,â McCarthy says. âAll she wanted was the ice cream.â
(See also: Helen drinking her great-grandsonâs Juicy Juice juice box at the park. âJust like she has to hide her ice cream,â says McCarthy, ânow sheâs drinking her great-grandsonâs juice box.â)
Mareâs potato-chip bedside manor
Speaking of Helen, thanks to a reckless teenâs slamming the door into her actual face, she is taken to the hospital for a possible concussion. Safely back home, Mare goes into her bedroom to check on her, peering over her bedside as she moves her hand methodically from a bag of potato chips to her mouth. When Helen tells her she feels no worse than she usually does, Mare responds through a mouthful of greasy bites, âGood enough for me.â
âIf you were checking on your very concussed mother and you were shoving potato chips into your mouth while youâre trying to make sure she was still breathing âŚ,â McCarthy says. âIt was an amazing use of food for us to understand Mare emotionally in that moment.â
The potato chips themselves are Herrâs, a local Pennsylvania brand, specifically Lancaster. And the set of Mareâs house always had them on deck. âWe just kept everything stocked all the time so [the actors] could impromptu take out whatever they wanted in any scene to use as a storytelling element,â McCarthy says. âI was watching one episode yesterday, Iâm not sure which one it was, but there was pizza on the table and there were potato chips, and there were cheese balls and there was beer and my stomach just hurt. I was like, how can you eat these cheeseballs and potato chips and drink beer while youâre eating pizza? Iâm like, Mare can do it!â
Episode 5: The âdaringâ zucchini
As we arrive to the miniseriesâs âthird act,â so to speak, Mare is once again taken out of her edible element, when she accepts an offer to go out on a date with her one-time partner, Detective Colin Zabel (Evan Peters). As they sit across from one another, Colin is grasping at conversational straws, while Mare proceeds to give him absolutely nothing. He asks how her meal is, a âtortellini special,â and admits he was considering ordering it as well, but was scared off by the zucchini. âThe zucchini obviously had to be there and the tortellini had to be there,â McCarthy says.
But unlike almost every other culinary staple thatâs appeared on the series prior to this point, the carb-y dish wasnât actually from a uniquely Pennsylvanian establishment â well, unless you consider Olive Garden uniquely Pennsylvanian. âWe just went to Olive Garden and got a bunch of yummies. We got takeout,â McCarthy says of the scene, which was made more difficult to shoot as it was during the COVID era.
Episode 6: Richardâs very Mare get-well basketÂ
When Mare is injured during a raid, her other suitor Richard drops by the house to offer well-wishes. (Again, with multiple men vying for her heart, itâs nice to see the show acknowledge that Mare does in fact look like the movie star by whom she is played.) And while some women might expect flowers or jewelry, Richard knows exactly what heâs doing when he arrives with a gift basket full of âhoagies from La Spadaâs,â and Rolling Rocks of course.
âAnd then obviously Mareâs [first] question is, âIs the Rolling Rock cold?â I donât even think she said thank you,â McCarthy says with a laugh. The props master adds that also in the basket, though not made clear to the audience, were TastyKakes (another local company), and more Herrâs chips. âSo Mare,â McCarthy says.
Every single episode: Rolling Rock. So much Rolling Rock.
If there were an official emblem of Easttown â or Easttown â itâd be a glistening green bottle of Rolling Rock. It makes an appearance in every single episode, whether the characters are at home, at a bar, or ⌠well, those are pretty much the only places they go. âI had to go back and do a little bit of research,â McCarthy says. âRolling Rock opened in 1939 in Pennsylvania and was known as the blue-collar, working manâs beer.â
While Rolling Rock is Mareâs beverage of choice, McCarthy also points out that some characters drink Yuengling, another local purveyor, âand it was scripted, which [characters] drank Yuengling, which characters drank Rolling Rock.â Rolling Rock has since moved its headquarters to New Jersey, but its legacy as the official beer of the Delco working man remains strong.
So, whatâs actually in those bottles? Given that every actor has to pound multiple per episode, it is a safe bet they werenât actually filled with beer or theyâd all be hammered by the third take. âItâs just water and caramel coloring,â McCarthy says. âItâs pretty amazing.â